Supreme Court rules against company lawsuit over unlawful regulations
The U.S. Supreme Court, in a 6-3 decision on Thursday, said private companies do not have an automatic right to sue over unlawful contracts.
The case, FS Credit Opportunities v. Saba Capital, focused on a company engaged in “activist investing,” a practice where investment companies identify low performing mutual funds and purchase a large portion to alter the funds’ investment strategies.
Saba Capital, the company at the center of the case, is based in Maryland, where practices of “activist investing” are against the law. Saba sued over the Maryland law, claiming it violated the Investment Company Act, which regulates investment companies.
Lower courts agreed that Saba had the right to sue to challenge the law. However, justices on the high court disagreed and reversed the lower court decision.
Justice Amy Coney Barrett said the Investment Company Act did not provide an automatic right to sue over a law, even if it was deemed unlawful. She said Congress did not expressly create an enforcement action for the law.
“Congress’s decision to create a comprehensive agency enforcement scheme supports the conclusion that private parties generally cannot enforce the ICA,” Barrett wrote in the court’s majority opinion.
Justices Elena Kagan, Sonia Sotomayor and Ketanji Brown Jackson disagreed with the majority’s position. The dissenters said justices in the majority did not fully consider how Congress has legislated on private rights of action.
Brown Jackson wrote there is evidence in the congressional record that lawmakers wished for companies to have a private right to action under the Investment Companies Act. She criticized the majority for not ruling in favor of companies seeking relief from percieved unlawful actions.
“Legislative Committee Reports unequivocally expressed Congress’s ‘wish’ that the statute continue to be interpreted to allow private suits, notwithstanding this Court’s increasing penchant for refusing to recognize implied rights of action,” Jackson wrote.
Barrett said the plain meaning of the language negates evidence in the congresional record of a different intent.
“The phrase ‘a court may not deny rescission at the instance of any party’ is most naturally read to direct a court’s remedial power when a party before it is urging rescission,” Barrett wrote in the majority opinion.
Latest News Stories
FBI: Illinois’ cyber crime losses reached $535M in 2025
Minnesota, Illinois AGs challenge federal orders to keep coal plants running
FBI finds Americans lose billions to cryptocurrency scams
Illinois lawmakers seek to regulate, tax prediction markets amid federal lawsuit
Report: Teacher’s union gives nearly 2M to org that trains for May Day protests
Illinois Quick Hits: Downtown Chicago office vacancies hit another record high
Trump issues dire warning to Iran as deadline looms
Report: Iran, inflation concern small businesses
U.S.-Israel-Iranian conflict escalating global energy, supply chain crisis
Meeting Summary and Briefs: Will County Board Land Use & Development Committee for March 26, 2026
Dwight Overcomes Seven Errors to Stun Beecher 13-12 in Walk-Off Thriller
Green Garden and New Lenox Road Projects Approved in $2.5 Million Public Works Package